Yeongheungdo (original) (raw)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Island belonging to South Korea

Myeon in Sudogwon, South Korea

Yeongheung Island 영흥도靈興島
Myeon
Korean transcription(s)
• Hangul 영흥도
• Hanja 靈興島
• Revised Romanization Yeongheungdo
• McCune-Reischauer Yŏnghŭngdo
Yeongheung BridgeYeongheung Bridge
Map
Coordinates: 37°16′N 126°28′E / 37.267°N 126.467°E / 37.267; 126.467
Country South Korea
Region Sudogwon
Administrative divisions 10 li
Area
• Total 23.46 km2 (9.06 sq mi)
Population (August 2005)
• Total 3,951
• Density 168.41/km2 (436.2/sq mi)
• Dialect Seoul

Yeongheungdo (Korean: 영흥도) is an island in the Yellow Sea, within the municipal borders of Incheon metropolitan city, in South Korea.

The island has a population of roughly 4000 people and an area of 23.46 km2.[1] The island is connected by road to neighbouring Seonjae-do (선재도) (and thus to Daebu Island and the mainland) by the 1.25 km-long Yeongheung Bridge,[2] which opened in December 2001. Administratively, the island today is divided into ten li: Nae-ri (내리) 1 to 7, and Oi-ri (외리) 1 to 3.[3] Employment is provided through tourism, fishing, and the thermoelectric power station, largely built on reclaimed land on the south-west coast of the island.

The island, along with neighbouring Seonjae-do, has been designated an Important Bird Area (IBA) by BirdLife International because its intertidal mudflats support a significant population of breeding Chinese egrets.[4]

During the Joseon Dynasty and up to 1914, Yeongheungdo was included in the old jurisdiction of Namyang County. In 1914 it was transferred to Bucheon, and in 1973 to Ongjin County, which became part of Incheon metropolitan city in 1995.

Yeongheungdo is featured strongly in the first-hand account The Secrets of Inchon: The Untold Story of the Most Daring Covert Mission of the Korean War. According to The Secrets of Inchon, Yeongheungdo was used for a reconnaissance/commando mission led by Commander Eugene F. Clark to surveil the regions along the Flying Fish Channel, including Wolmido, Daebudo and Muuido, among others. This expedition preceded and allowed for the successful Battle of Incheon.[5]

Yeongheungdo has several sandy beaches, most notably Nae-ri (내리) on the east coast, Simripo (십리포) in the north-east, along the edge of which lies a grove of Carpinus coreana, and Janggyeong-ri (장경리) in the north-west.

  1. ^ "영흥도자료집 (Yeongheungdojaryojip)". Youngheungdo.com. Retrieved 2010-09-25.
  2. ^ "영흥대교 (Yeongheungdaegyo)". Youngheungdo.com. Retrieved 2010-09-25.
  3. ^ "영흥도-마을별안내 (Yeongheungdo-maeulbyeolannae)". Youngheungdo.com. Retrieved 2010-09-25.
  4. ^ "Yeongheung-do and Sonje-do islands". BirdLife Data Zone. BirdLife International. 2024. Retrieved 2024-10-17.
  5. ^ Commander Eugene Franklin Clark, "The Secrets of Inchon: The Untold Story of the Most Daring Covert Mission of the Korean War", 2002

37°16′N 126°28′E / 37.267°N 126.467°E / 37.267; 126.467